Weak-foot training is dedicated work on the non-dominant foot — passing, receiving, striking, and dribbling at match tempo. At U12 and above, coaches at competitive levels evaluate both feet. A player with a reliable weak foot has twice the passing angles and cannot be forced onto one side by a smart defender.
This page covers how to train weak foot specifically for U6 players (ages 5–6). At U6 the goal is ball familiarity, not technique. Kids need many short touches, lots of smiling, and zero standing in lines. Keep sessions playful — rules should be simple enough to explain in one sentence.
The drills are ordered from fundamentals to competitive reps. A typical session is 10–20 minutes of moving activity, broken into 3–4 micro-games. Move from solo ball exploration (dribble, stop, move) to tiny 2-on-2 games as soon as the group can keep a ball within a small grid. Avoid lines and drills that require waiting.
The biggest mistake at U6 in weak foot is that weak-foot reps are performed slower than strong-foot reps, which hides the gap. Fix it first, then stack the drills below on top of a cleaner base movement. Weak-foot reps count double: if a drill says 20 reps, that is 10 on each foot, and the weak-foot set runs first while the player is still fresh. Film one full set per week and compare rep one to rep twenty; honest self-review accelerates skill acquisition more than any coach cue.
Why Weak Foot Matters at U6
At U12 and above, coaches at competitive levels evaluate both feet. A player with a reliable weak foot has twice the passing angles and cannot be forced onto one side by a smart defender.
At U6 specifically, at u6 the goal is ball familiarity, not technique. kids need many short touches, lots of smiling, and zero standing in lines. keep sessions playful — rules should be simple enough to explain in one sentence. Move from solo ball exploration (dribble, stop, move) to tiny 2-on-2 games as soon as the group can keep a ball within a small grid. Avoid lines and drills that require waiting.
4 Weak Foot Drills for U6
Progress through the drills in order. Warm up with the first drill, build intensity through the middle drills, and finish with the most game-like rep. Weak-foot reps are non-negotiable.
- 1. Weak Foot Development (beginner). Setup: Ball at the weak foot only. Execution: Run a full 15-minute session — mastery, passing, striking — using only the weak foot. No strong-foot touches allowed. Work: 15 minutes. Coaching points: Run a full 15-minute session — mastery, passing, striking — using only the weak foot; No strong-foot touches allowed.
- 2. Weak-Foot Wall Passing (beginner). Setup: 10 yards from a wall. Execution: Pass firmly with the weak foot, receive with the weak foot. No strong foot at all. Work: 4 × 2 minutes. Coaching points: Pass firmly with the weak foot, receive with the weak foot; No strong foot at all.
- 3. Weak-Foot Shooting (intermediate). Setup: Ball 12 yards from a goal or target. Execution: Strike with the laces of the weak foot. Focus on plant-foot position and ankle lock. Work: 20 reps. Coaching points: Strike with the laces of the weak foot; Focus on plant-foot position and ankle lock.
- 4. Weak-Foot 1v1 Finish (intermediate). Setup: Partner serves from the wing. Execution: Attack the ball at pace and finish first-time with the weak foot only. If the angle favors the strong foot, reset. Work: 10 reps. Coaching points: Attack the ball at pace and finish first-time with the weak foot only; If the angle favors the strong foot, reset.
Common Mistakes to Correct
These are the errors that show up most often when U6 players train weak foot:
- Weak-foot reps are performed slower than strong-foot reps, which hides the gap.
- Weak foot is only used when forced, so it never becomes automatic.
- Strike is attempted with the outside of the weak foot — a shortcut that never holds up in games.
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How to Structure a U6 Session
A typical U6 weak foot session is 10–20 minutes of moving activity, broken into 3–4 micro-games. Move from solo ball exploration (dribble, stop, move) to tiny 2-on-2 games as soon as the group can keep a ball within a small grid. Avoid lines and drills that require waiting. Keep the ratio of ball contacts to standing-in-line as high as possible — quality reps beat quantity reps only once form holds up under tempo.
How Film Review Accelerates This Skill
Technical work improves fastest when the player sees their own reps. Film one full drill set per week and compare the first rep to the last — what changes? LevelUp's AI grades every weak foot rep on form, consistency, and weak-foot balance so the player knows what to fix before the next session.
